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Montana governor says he’s open to idea of supporting Keystone XL pipeline

In this June 9, 2019 photo, Democratic presidential candidate Steve Bullock speaks during the Iowa Democratic Party's Hall of Fame Celebration in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall

Montana Gov. Steve Bullock said Monday during an online meeting about climate change that he’s open to supporting the Keystone XL pipeline “if it’s done right,” a departure from other Democratic presidential candidates who condemn the proposed oil line from Canada as an environmental threat.

Bullock held the town hall-style discussion on Facebook to engage young people on climate change and to announce he is forming a panel to make recommendations on how to reduce emissions in Montana and prepare the state for the effects of climate change.

But he didn’t appear to be prepared for the pipeline question that came from Avery Old Coyote, a Crow tribal member who was one of the young people he invited to sit next to him during the broadcast.

Bullock initially said it was important to consult with Indigenous groups whose land the pipeline would pass through and noted that the oil from the Alberta oilsands being hauled over land now is at risk of spills.

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But Old Coyote pressed him for an answer, prompting Bullock to decry how the Trump administration has gone about approving the pipeline but leaving himself open to the project itself.

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“I’ve said from the beginning that — look — if it’s done right, we can’t take it off the table,” Bullock said.

READ MORE: U.S. court lifts block on Keystone XL pipeline construction

Watch below: Some videos from Global News’ coverage of the Keystone XL pipeline project.

His comments underscore the tension of being both governor of an energy-producing state and one of nearly two dozen Democratic presidential candidates.

Most Democratic candidates oppose the proposed pipeline from Canada, citing its potential to add to greenhouse gas emissions. An exception is U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado.

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The 1,900-kilometre pipeline would begin in Alberta and run through Montana and other states before tying into existing infrastructure in Nebraska.

The USD $8-billion project has been tied up for years, most recently by legal challenges from environmental advocacy groups that say the Trump administration did not consider potential oil spills and other environmental effects when it issued a 2017 permit.

Earlier this year, U.S. President Donald Trump tried to invalidate that lawsuit by issuing a new permit for the pipeline and revoking the challenged permit, leading to new lawsuits.

Afterward, Old Coyote, a student entering a Syracuse University doctoral program, said he was “very disappointed” by Bullock’s answer to his question on the Keystone XL pipeline.

He said Bullock may have been talking as Montana’s governor but that he had Bullock’s presidential candidacy in mind when he asked the question.

“I don’t want to say I can’t support him, but it’s going to make it harder,” Old Coyote said.

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